The search was constant and divided by patrols. Nazis did not just search for Jews from 9 to 5 or only under the cover of night; they had no reason to hide what they were doing.
Every Day
They did not quit killing the Jews until the last day of the war.
The Nazi forces would check houses for hidden Jews each day. If the Nazis thought the people in the homes acted weird, they would return many times to a single home each day.
After the 6 day war, the Jews took Israel once again. After the holocaust, the Jews and Israelis have prepared for war. Now they have the land and the fighting capability that once they had in King David's days. Wars will come and go. The Nazis are long gone. The new-Nazis are a white power group or groups with no means to go to war with the Jews.
One cannot assume that anyone actually believed that. But the Nazis did blame the Jews for all kinds of trouble. It was a political move like many before and to this day, it united the nation against a common enemy.
So the Nazis could kill more Jews each day. Some extermination camps killed between 3,000-5,000 Jews every day, and then burned the bodies.
Kristallnacht is translated from German into "night of broken glass," which is fitting. Kristallnacht was when Nazis ran through towns smashing windows of German businesses and shops and setting fire to those businesses. Jews were beaten during that day, and forced to relocate elsewhere. It was the start of the Nazi's Final Solution.
They were either in line for the gas chambers, or they were murdered in some sort of evil way by the Nazis.
The Nazis believed that the Jews only needed 186 calories a day.
one thing i found out they did is that they would take the Jews from the camps they kept them in (where they only got 300 calories a day) and would get them to dig a hole in which they would shoot them making the Jews dig their own graves.
They had to wear the Star of David when outside their homes after a number of decrees in 1941. There were other markers that Jews were required to use before the Yellow Star became the prominent and singular identifying mark of Jews in te Third Reich.
It's very simple: if you did not follow the rules, you were shot. If you followed the rules, you survived at least one more day. Every day held alive the hope that the Nazis would be defeated and the horror would end, so Jews chose life.